Windsor Star

A MAN & HIS ISLAND

Hurricane Irma gave singer Kenny Chesney a new musical mission

- KRISTIN M. HaLL

At Philadelph­ia’s Lincoln Financial Field this June, Kenny Chesney flew in a large group of VIP guests to visit with him before performing for some 55,000 fans. They weren’t music industry bigwigs.

They were schoolchil­dren and teachers from the U.S. Virgin Islands, where hurricane Irma made landfall last year and caused massive destructio­n. And they also happened to be his neighbours on the island of St. John.

“I’ve spent the majority of my adult life walking those beaches and hanging out in those bars and writing songs,” Chesney, 50, recalled later in his manager’s office in Nashville, Tenn.

“All of a sudden, it was a place that was very beautiful and that was very broken.”

St. John was among several Caribbean islands hit last September by the most powerful hurricane to develop over the open Atlantic. Throughout the Caribbean, the Category 5 storm knocked out power and cellphone, damaged roads, airports and hospitals and smashed up boats, businesses and homes.

Chesney was not on the island, but he opened his home there to friends and neighbours so they could ride out the storm.

“I could hear the anxiety and the stress on everyone,” Chesney said. “The people that actually rode the storm out in the bottom of my home, I was able to get them off the island a couple of weeks after the storm. And you know when they got to my home, they were wearing the same clothes they had on that morning (of the storm).” After the storm hit, he wrote the title track of his new album, Songs for the Saints, out Friday.

“I was writing the songs as a lot of the destructio­n and devastatio­n was happening,” Chesney said. “I’ve never made a record like that in the middle of such anxiety.” Although born in East Tennessee, Chesney has become an islander at heart. On St. John, he made friends and enjoyed the peace away from the demands of his superstar life.

“The people that I met there didn’t care what I did,” Chesney said. “They had no idea. It was great.”

He turned that island lifestyle into his brand and the loyal No Shoes Nation that packs stadiums. The island had fed his human spirit and his creative side as a songwriter, but now he had his chance to give back.

Within days, Chesney set up a foundation called Love for Love City, also the title of the second song he wrote after the storm. He helped bring in medical supplies and equipment, had crews clear out debris and rescue pets and bought new musical instrument­s for the St. John School of the Arts. “Not many people know what Kenny has done and is still doing for the rebuilding efforts in the Virgin Islands,” said his friend and country star Eric Church. “It’s a place that is a part of his DNA, of his story. It tells you the kind of person he is and how big his heart is to see him helping in this way.”

Chesney was also working on a record deal with Warner Music Nashville, leaving Sony after more than two decades. He called John Esposito, the chairman of Warner Music Nashville, and told him he was ready to work with Warner, but he had a caveat.

“He says, ‘The first record I’m doing is a charity record,”’ Esposito said.Esposito agreed that proceeds should go to the foundation, but beyond that Esposito said the record is just a great album. “I’ve actually listened to this album 250 times and not only am I never bored with it, I hear something else unveiled with every listen,” Esposito said.

The album has already produced Chesney’s 30th No. 1 single, Get Along, making him the artist with the most songs to top Billboard’s Country Airplay chart, surpassing Tim McGraw, Alan Jackson and George Strait.

In February, Chesney visited students and their teachers at St. John School for the Arts after donating new instrument­s and he talked to them about life post-Irma.

“It was a really emotional day when we went there, just to see the look on their faces when you give them a guitar or a steel drum,” Chesney said. “You never know what one of those guitars will do. I know what one guitar did for me.”

 ?? RICK SCUTERI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? After hurricane Irma destroyed much of the U.S. Virgin Islands, country music superstar Kenny Chesney started organizing relief efforts.
RICK SCUTERI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS After hurricane Irma destroyed much of the U.S. Virgin Islands, country music superstar Kenny Chesney started organizing relief efforts.
 ?? JILL TRUNNELL/FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kenny Chesney, centre, seen with residents from St. John in the U.S. Virgin Islands, is donating proceeds from the sale of his new album to hurricane recovery efforts.
JILL TRUNNELL/FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kenny Chesney, centre, seen with residents from St. John in the U.S. Virgin Islands, is donating proceeds from the sale of his new album to hurricane recovery efforts.

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